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  5. Differential Recognition of Nanoparticle Protein Corona and Modified Low-Density Lipoprotein by Macrophage Receptor with Collagenous Structure
 
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Differential Recognition of Nanoparticle Protein Corona and Modified Low-Density Lipoprotein by Macrophage Receptor with Collagenous Structure

Author(s)
Lara, Sandra  
Perez-Potti, AndrĂ©  
Herda, Luciana M.  
Adumeau, Laurent  
Dawson, Kenneth A.  
Yan, Yan  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/12168
Date Issued
2018-04-18
Date Available
2021-05-18T14:22:17Z
Abstract
Key practical challenges such as understanding the immunological processes at the nanoscale and controlling the targeting and accumulation of nano-objects in vivo now further stimulate efforts to underpin phenomenological knowledge of the nanoscale with more mechanistic and molecular insight. Thus, the question as to what constitutes nanoscale biological identity continues to evolve. Certainly nanoparticles in contact with a complex biological milieu develop a biological identity, differing from the original nanomaterial, now referred to as the "biomolecular corona". However, this surface-adsorbed layer of biomolecules may in some circumstance lead to different forms of receptor-particle interactions not evident only from the identity of the surface-adsorbed biomolecules and hard to predict or detect by current physicochemical methods. Here we show that scavenger receptors may recognize complex as yet unidentified biomolecular surface layer motifs, even when no current physicochemical analysis is capable of doing so. For instance, fluorescently labeled SiO nanoparticles in a biological milieu are strongly recognized by the macrophage receptor with collagenous structure (MARCO) in even dense biological media (human serum) apparently using a form of binding with which most of the MARCO's known ligands (e.g., LPS, modified LDL) fail to compete. Such observations may suggest the need for a much stronger emphasis on nanoscale receptor-corona and other biomolecular interaction studies if one wishes to unravel how biomolecular recognition drives outcomes in the nanoscale biological domain. 2
Sponsorship
European Commission - Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)
Science Foundation Ireland -- replace
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
ACS
Journal
ACS Nano
Volume
12
Issue
5
Start Page
4930
End Page
4937
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 ACS
Subjects

Animals

Cattle

Humans

Silicon dioxide

Lipoproteins

Bovine serum albumin

Immunologic receptors...

Transfection

Gene expression

Adsorption

Surface properties

Nanoparticles

HEK293 cells

Protein unfolding

Protein corona

Protein domains

DOI
10.1021/acsnano.8b02014
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1936-0851
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

MARCO Manuscript_SUPPORTING INFO_SL_8th March_FINAL (1).docx

Size

1.41 MB

Format

Unknown

Checksum (MD5)

ddfb63ec97cc97000aaa0656a63d7bd8

No Thumbnail Available
Name

MARCO Manuscript_Revised_14th April.docx

Size

36.24 MB

Format

Unknown

Checksum (MD5)

d193da4d06303d05157d395c640329a6

Owning collection
Chemistry Research Collection
Mapped collections
Centre for Bionano Interactions (CBNI) Research Collection•
Conway Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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